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4 "ridsy, June A 15S O
MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFOK), gRC
MEDFORDtTcRIlUfl
"Everyone in Southern
Read! The Mail Tribune"
Published Daily except SaturdoOfc
J1DDFORO PKLM1NU t-J
33 North Fir St Ph. SP-61
ROBERT W aUHLditor
HERB GREY Adrtisin Mai mm
GERALD LATHAM. BusTnjaB (
XRIC ALLEN. JR Managing S41e
EARL H ADAMS City tito
HARRY CHIPMAN. TeleB Bnm
RICHARD JEWETT. Sports BSiUV
OLIVE STARCHER. Soct dito
DALE ERICKSON. Circulatia ajg
An Independent NsMlt
Entered as second c'ga) mgm-T 4f
Hertford Oregon und $t tt
March 3. lggl
SUBSCRIPTION AWt
Mail In Advanifl: Cos foe.
Daily and Sunday 1 yea 1 9
Daily and Sunday 0 m( 00
Daily and Snndav aPmtm CIS
Sunday Only Onei yea
Bv Carrier In AdVSt-ic tSaft0)
Ashland. Central SJoiet.
Point. Jacksonville r.oie mil.
Phoenix. Shady Coy tVtBie
r Talppt ami' iA Mintne foutfft:
Daily and Sunday 1 WW Wft
Dailv and Sunria if (M. IN
Carrier and Dtg '"PJ IPe
All Tcr: CMh IB MfloO
Official Paper of CiCfSdT r(i
tornciai Paper or iatmutm ceeery
United Pres-ill UtM W
MEMBER Or'AUDi'BttflAb
0 CIRCULATIOII
("Advertising Reprtilaie:
iTCTnni tWa W rfirV rwf Aft
fices In New 9oi4b Cioit De
fTN trolt San Franciaao. iet AnfeJea.
Seattle. Portlar. Lov, At
lanta, Vancouvarj c
UWSPAlt
0UHIS
4JQC(ATlON
iflM Time
M&ai$ mi' Kkson County
Hisfv from the file of The
Wail TntjufW) 10. 20. 30 and
U ,
io VSkM AOO
June 0, ,1848 (Sunday) o
Medfora (grill join other
Oregon coffcaunltiei 'which
have, adoplei yiight saving
itimfor th Summf months.
The Jackson 0u1 iher
iffs cosseTs Sinlieoo ourt
in downtagS Mfdfbrg yester
day aftgrnodw ete$ $105.42
for VanpofJ fflie
20 Y&St &w6
Jiufi)$ H3 (tfeodar)
Worfc started today at Main
st. and! Ggt)trl (jkyt 00 Med
is !g,00 flf etrie tep-ftnd-
rjfo tnaVeaytteai.
rcttS Afthuf dPexfyf
(h?, (b& goUjftift: "The
first (grasshopper) of the? sea
(sn showejSj up iSsf, week a
vital c?$ in turf j gfoducfion
arid) tl Ashing; industry ."
Juso B, 1938 (Wednesday)
bill aj signed Mty 29
by Pregldgnt Cooli author
izi5 tWgi iisioninc'o Simp
son VVilson, frrrfirly of tn
gell iIeft ftocfouhi itt tht
Modoc ir.
Fm loci n3 pefsonil
column: it Mt incluge
athe hfivy x:hule of
child el&rg clioift Ibr the
county Spilth uSIf."
(30 vgSi 9
Jurod.iBl8(Tbx4Jr)
Mon!5toif of Mefora
will stAJt cldKnj ft 9
daily except turfejt- when
the cl& fioiflT f?.i t- JO
p.m.
From locjSJ na jefional
(gclumn: "Something ftew
barn dance, in bia fctra with
4
i good dancing Qpov tnd 8
line dinner throfcn ia ft Stms
Valley Saturaf."
tfcaP feet MJ.t
r
NAT I Off At (EgiTOtlAU
Ni) or sKr;
even or t 0) eg I bee;
six is go"
1. What "tsJanVlbearsf-Vne
nickname "Eirrald Isle"?
2. What rfiime i9 (given to
the study of insect?
3. Do more peiorj i the
world speak EnjliSh, Chineae,
q or Russian?
4. Dalmatian ftags come
from ilmatia; tru or ftlse?
5. The?5 are U.S. mint in
three of the followintJ cities;
name them: San rfnciieo,
Washington, D.C., Phildl-
x phia, Denver, Fort Knox.
6. Washington and L)e uni
versity is located in which
state?
7. During World War II,
was Portugal a combatant?
8. WThat have the following
names in common: Simplon,
Holland and Moffat?
9. What do the letters "pp"
stand for in musical composi
tions? 10. What is a glazier?
Answers: 1 Irelanfl. 3
Entomology. 3 Chines. 4
False (England). 5 Denver.
Philadelphia, San Francisco.
6 Virginia. 7 No. 8 They
are all tunnels. Pianissimo
(ery soft). 10 A glass cut
ler and setter.
HOMETOWN BLUES
Memphis, Tenn. (UPI)
Rock 'n Roll music is losing
in popularity In Elvis Pres
ley's hometown, a local radio
station reported Thursday.
The station said a poll of lis
teners showed only 12 per
cent favored the type of mu
sic Elvis made famous.
Editorial Correspondence . . .
Rice Mountain Lodge, Paul
oration Dy and the coldest one we can recall since May 30th,
ltce. Tliat wts in Rockford, Illinois, and we remember the
cold for it was too cold to eat ice cream, and it had to be
ttrriblf fold to reduce the lure of ice cream, particularly
h the two boys had the great privilege of freezing it. We
remember the incident because Uncle B. made so much sport
f the fee cream kids because they refused a second serving
fccause they claimed it made their respective heads and teeth
cfie.
That ort of phenomenon had never happened before,
f!r tinea. In fact vt had ice cream for the holiday dinner
today, end even the grandchildren "ate it up" and asked for
more. So it is possible that Decoration Day 70 years ago was
colder than this one or perhaps the small fry born and bred
up here near the Canadian line, have more Eskimo blood in
thehif veins than their predecessors born and bred on the
"Cafishy" benkt of the Rock River.
There are no Decoration Day parades up here in the
AJirondacds; the schools and colleges have a holiday but
Side from th banks few of the merchants do. Yet it was
quite an anti-slavery district before and during the Civil
War. Xverybody knows about "John Brown's body lies a
mouldering in the grave while his soul goes marching on."
But how many know that he is buried near Lake Placid
only a few miles away, where for many years he lived and
handled an "underground railway" station for fugitive
laves, en route to Canada? It is a national monument now
byt according to report few tourists visit it. Comparatively
few tourists visit this part of Upper New York now anyway,
compared to the "good old days" when the Rockefellers, Har-
rimans, Rieds, Aston and Vanderbilts spent summers at Paul
Smiths with their private cars on a N. Y. Central siding,
while they hunted, fished and held gay parties at Paul
Smiths hotel. Today there are no private cars, no railroad
service in fact north "of Lakes Clear and Placid, as was the
case only a year ago, summer tourists coming via motor car
and trailers now for a week-end excursion usually, though
some may camp for a week or two, and then go home. So
time continues to fly, the country and conditions fly with it.
It is rather odd there are not more tourists up here at
this time of year. It is bitter cold but when fishing is goocLthe
eold never kept the Medford "flycasters" from whipping the
Bogue. And fishing is good according to the local papers. In
one of the recent issues a certain Tim Ahern has his picture
holding a 24 inch "brown trout" and Gordon Benware hold
ing a 21 pound 4 ounce "Great Northern" he caught in Rac
quette Pond not far from his home in Tupper Lake. We don't
know what a "Great Northern" is but it looks as though it
might be a "musky" they are being caught we know in the
St. Lawrence. One deterrent if we were concerned would be
the black and the deer-flies which make life so miserable
down at the "farm." But one compensation to the cold wind
and the present temperature is the fact even the hardy and
pestiferous local insects can't take it and hide away some
where. Yesterday we motored over to the "farm" to take care,
of three of the infants so "Mrs. Mac" could take the nurse to
a doctor in Potsdam. The No. 1 infant was taken along, for.
she and her neit oldest sister are about as friendly as France
aad the Algerians. The eldest is a perfect darling but we have
to admit her absence made ail the difference in the world
between war and peace. In fact the trio left behind were in
credibly angelic. Perhaps the fact they range from 6 weeks
through 2 and 3 years had something to do with it. And No.
2 has no scruples against throwing her cup and saucer at
No. 1, but hesitates to commit assault and battery where the
baby is concerned, and her younger brother is so gun-shy
and such an artful dodger that she gave up trying to run over
him with her doll's baby-cab. We hasten to add in the interest
of historical accuracy, that "your correspondent" can take
no credit for this "Quaker Meeting" atmosphere and a peace
that passeth all understanding. All the hard work AS
USUAL was done by the other side of the house. R.W.R.
Spending
Off States
Faster Than U.S.
Bf Coaaresional Quarterly
Washington (CQ) Fig
ures just released by the Cen
sus Bureau show that the 48
states increased their total
spending between fiscal 1956
and 1937 three times as much
as the Federal Government
did.
Also, most states went deep
er into the red during that
period while the Federal Gov
ernment reduced its debt.
Th Census Bureau's annu
al study shows that spending
by ttate governments went
from ?18.8 billion in fiscal
1836 to a record $21 billion in
fiscal 1857, an increase of 12
per cent.
Thie compares with an in
crease in Federal spending
from (66.3 billion in fiscal
1938 to S69.4 billion in fiscal
193T, an increase of 4 per
cent.
SCucslioa Top Spending
The biggest slice of state
government spending went
for education, S6.5 billion.
"Neft ceme highways, $6 bil
lion; public welfare, $2.8 bil
lion, end health expenditures.
l.g billion.
Sgeaiing increased by more
then 25 per cent in Connecti
cut, Nevada and Pennsylvania
between 1936 and 1957. High-
Holt's Daughters
firing 81 Orphans
Portland (UPI) A ' group
of 1 Koresn, orphans, ac
companied by two daughters
of Creswell farmer Harry
Holt, arrived here by plane
Thursday to begin new lives
in the United States.
Barbara and Mollie Holt
said their father had decided
to remain in Seoul to super
vise work on a new Holt or
phanage just outside the Ko
rean city. Mollie planned to
return to Korea Sunday.
Barbara is engaged to Jack
Chambers, 21. stationed with
American troops in Korea and
they plan to marry when he
returns to this country.
thirty-one of the children
arriving Thursday go to new
homes in California while 16
will live in Oregon.
Smiths, N. Y. This is Dec
and Debt
Climbs
ways accounted for the major
increases in Connecticut and
Pennsylvania and education
and health in Nevada.
Five states spent less in fis
cal 1957 than in fiscal 1956
Indiana, Kansas, Maine, New
Jersey and South Carolina.
Sharp reductions in the out
lay for toll roads accounted
for the major portion of the
decreases in all those states
except South Carolina. South
Carolina's educational ex
penditures dropped.
Total state debt rose from
$12.9 billion in fiscal 1956 to
SI 3. 7 billion in fiscal 1957, an
increase of 7 per cent. The
Federal Government debt was
reduced from $272.8 billion in
fiscal 1956 to $270.5 billion
in fiscal 1957, down .8 per
cent.
The debt of 35 states in
creased between fiscal 1956
and 1957. The biggest total
debts were registered by New
York, $2 billion; Pennsylvan
ia, $1.2 billion; California,
$1.2 billion; and Massachu
setts, $1 billion. South Dakota
showed the smallest debt,
$487,000.
Individual Stales
Dividing the number of peo
ple within a state into what
the state government spent
gives per capita spending. Ne
vada spent most per person,
$261.11, and New Jersey the
least, $83.17, in fiscal 1957.
Oregon ranked 15th highest
with a per capita expenditure
of $152.26. Oregon's total
spending in fiscal 1957 was
.$263,868,000, a 12.7 per cent
increase over fiscal 1956.
Nevada in fiscal 1957 also
collected the most taxes per
capita, $137.76. Lowest per
capita tax was in New Jersey,
$50.92. Oregon ranked sixth
highest with a per capita tax
collection of $111.94. Oregon's
total tax collection in fiscal
1957 was $193,985,000, a 19.9
per cent increase over fiscal
1956.
Delaware in fiscal 1957
showed the highest per capita
debt, $352.74. South Dakota
registered the lowest, 70 cents.
Oregon in fiscal 1957 ranked
12th highest with a per capita
debt of $104.94. Oregon's to
tal debt for fiscal 1957 was
$181,867,000, a 5:9 -per -cent
increase over fiscal 1956.
(Copyright 1958, Congres
sional Quarterly Inc.)
Dennis the Menace
Opgi?ATOR? Listen, i want yato savheuo't&a
LlTTLfc Kit? mOS WBfi &EH Oti THE TELERHON5 BBPDRBl
Washington Report
By William
SAMPLER OF SOURCES
Washington For the real
Washington inside on two
great issues, this correspond
ent has called first upon three
of his confidential informants.
Two of these informants, or
" 1 an - hptwppns
o I
are young la
i dies in touch
' with persons
V n n r n in
AX . . A . W
them as Mr.
Know So and
Mr.. Try Hard.
The third is a
somewhat old
er young lady.
.HW tt n tarts
Willam S. White "
are with a thoroughly, bipar
tisan and largely social group
she calls the Proper Sillies.
The opinions of the Proper
Sillies have a quality of mark
ed detachment not to say a
giddy unconcern. The Proper
Sillies are prepared ,to issue
a statement to this effect:
On France-Let the Junior
League be lend-leased, not
merely into Paris but into all
the provincial French towns.
This clearly would restore to
the French social fabric some
of that starch that everybody
says has been missing. . '
On the recession What re
cession? There is altogether
too much loose talk. Every
body probably should have a
good deal more faith certain
ly should spend a good deal
more money.
MR. KNOW So does not take
a frivolous view. He is
entirely and gloomily certain
that he knows the final an
swers to both the French and
the recession problems.
The report on Mr. Know
So, nevertheless, must abrupt
ly end at this suspenseful
juncture. For he is so loudly
positive with his points that
the points themselves really
cannot be grasped in the re
sultant din.
But Mr. Try hard, at least,
is anything but dogmatic. It
is his mature conclusion, first,
that we ought to cut taxes and
back General Charles de
Gaulle all the way. But then
it occurs to him, on further
reflection, that it really might
not be wise to cut taxes. There
is the question of inflation,
isn't there?
Moreover, the more he
thinks about France the less
sure he is about that situation.
Mr. Try Hard, too, must be
left here. He could not be
more eager to serve but
frankly the old boy is a little
too slow and uncertain with
his solutions. . '
'
THUS must be abandoned in
mid-column all these second-hand
"sources." This writ
er now brings forward two
Try and
TOW 1
-By BENNETT CERF-
A VISITOR made his first
picked up a match with
first tee. Both players were
hack their way around the
course in something like
seven hours.
Back in the clubhouse, the
visitor was astonished to be
received by a round of
cheers. "Congratulations!"
explained one member.
"You're the first man who's
ever been able to stick it
out for 18 holes with 01'
VJhoozis. He's probably the
most awful golfer who ever
lived." '
"Now just a moment,"
protested the visitor, "He
beat me four up."
Much against his will, Voltaire was conned into speaking a small
eulogy at the funeral of a famous acquaintance, whom he. had
loathed for years. Said Voltaire: "Here lies a man who waa a
sturdy patriot, a gifted writer, a loyal friend, and a faithful husband
provided, of course, that he is really dead."
I " Q 1951. by Bennett Cert. Pistributal y King mturea Syndltate.
S. White
original sources of his own.
One of these is Senator
M. C. Laude Senator Magna
Cum Laude, to use his full
name.
Senator Laude, as every
body knows, once was a dis
tinguished instructor in poul
try management. Accordingly,
he is ready to admit that he
is an intellectual in politics r
of whom there are not many
and his views have great
weight with other intellectual
politicians.
Senator Laude prefers hot
to involve himself in the is
sue of France. His whole ded
ication is to anti-recession
policy at home." He deeply
feels that the thing to do is
to cut all taxes particularly
for all persons earning less
than such amounts as would
make them prey to any con
servatism that might be creep
ing evilly about.
Along with this tax reduc
tion, of course, he favors vast
ly increased Federal spend
ing everywhere and in every
category.
He strongly suspects that in
resisting his program the
Eisenhower A d m inistration
arid the Democratic Congres
sional -leaders are in vote
catching cahoots against hon
est liberalism.
AS HE says, Senator Laude
is one man at least with
the political courage it takes
to vote for a tax reduction in
a Congressional election year.
Finally, in the French crisis,
there is Senator Pharr-Right.
Senator Pharr-Right has a
clear-cut solution: He would
forthwith abandon the North
Atlantic Treaty Organizati6n
as an obviously inter-nationalist
and foreign entangle
ment. He would simply refuse
to recognize any kind of
French government at all
now or ever.
He might ordinarily have
some sympathy for the de
Gaulle government, for de
Gaulle is disliked by the
Socialists. But, as Pharr-Right
put it, that fellow de Gaulle
is, after all, a foreigner and,
worse yet, a French foreigner.
All this foolishment is not
too greatly removed, at that,
from some of the present
private political debate in
Washington drawing rooms.
(Copyright, 1958. by United
Feature Syndicate, Inc.)
SPEEDERS WARNED
Goldsboro, N.C. (UPI)
Puzzled why their radar
check wasn't netting any
speeders; police investigated
and found a sign a block
away reading: "Whammy.one
block ahead. Look out! Zor
ro." When the sign came
down, police soon nabbed 17
speeders.
Stop Me
trip to the local golf club, and
an agreeable old codger on the
dreadful, but they managed to
4
Communications
Latters to the Editor must
bear the asm and address of
the writer although under cer
tain circumstances the use of a
pen name or initial for publica
tion is permissible. The Mail
Tribune reserves the right to
edit all letters with an eye to
clarification and condensation.
Letters submitted for publica
tion must not exceed 400 words.
The letters printed in this
column do not necessarily repre
sent the views of the paper, in
fact the contrary is often the
case.
How About Raises?
To the Editor, and Citizens
of Jackson County: Families
of the Rogue River valley, do
you want the moderate pros
perity we have now to grow?
I am only one resident shop
per in your community.
A few days ago I had a
pair of shoes repaired in one
of your local repair shops.
Tomorrow I will shop for
groceries in one of your local
markets.
Next week I will need a
haircut in one of your barber
shops.
My boy needs a pair of
shoes before July 1.
Storekeeper, would you
like me to visit your store
more often?
Just now, your elected of
ficials are deciding if we
Jackson county employees
could use a cost-of-living
wage increase.
What is your opinion?
Please ask your elected of
ficials their opinion on this
matter.
W. I. B.
(Name on file).
Indians and Missiles
. To the Editor: Yesterday at
our public library I read your
comments on our shameful
treatment of the American
Indian through the centuries.
Took it down in shorthand
and hope have you correctly
named. I agree with you. 100
per cent and have been cru
sading for them in a small
way with my portable Royal.
During the first years of
the present Administration
the Indians got a raw deal
from the President a raft of
bills was rushed through, tak
ing some tribes off their res
ervations, refusing aid to even
their sick children, as the
then secretary of the Depart
ment of Health Welfare and
Education, Oveta Culp Hob
by, did. And I was shocked
when the President actually
signed a bill cutting off all
liquor control on Indian Res
ervations. At the time he was
vacationing on one of his rich
friends' estates in Denver.
That good paper, the Denver
Post, strongly disapproved of
this, and so did other excel
lent newspapers.
I have wondered sometimes
if our present troubles abroad
and at home are punishment
for some of the things we
have done to the first real
Americans and the money
we spend trying to win
friends in other lands. To my
mind, if we had lived up to
our splendid motto, "In God
We Trust," and had not put
so much faith in the Almighty
Dollar, we might be happier
today.
The President seems much
more interested in the needy
Jolk in other lands than he is
with those he has at home. I
think the , wartime excise
taxes should be cut instead
they are to continue and so
will the high cost of living in
general while the President
keeps saying things are get
ting better.
I have lived 78 years on
this planet, seen three wars,
and now with the Mighty
Atom which we learned how
to split ALAS we are all
liable to land on the moon
blown there or somewhere
else in space.
And every time a missile
goes wrong, two million dol
lars go down the drain.
But life is certainly inter
esting! Miss Winifred Heath,
Southern Hotel,
San Diego 1, Calif.
Council of Bli
Slates Meeting
The Jackson County Coun
cil of the Blind will meet
Saturday, June 8, at 2 p.m.,
in the St. Mark's guild hall,
Fifth st. and Oakdale ave.
Newly elected president,
John Ragsdale of Eagle Point,
will be in charge. Ronnie
Warner is first vice president;
Dorsey Lowe, second vice
president; Howard Chilson,
chaplain; and . Mrs. D. A.
Harris, secretary-treasurer.
Refreshments will be served
following - the business ses
sion." Friends " and" members
are invited to attend. "
DON'T
June 7
at
DESERT SERVICE
See Ad on Page 8, Section 1
Crisis in France Overshadows
Other International Events
By CHARLES M. McCANN
UPI Foreign News Analyst
The week's good and bad
news on the international
balance sheet: 4
France, facing political cha
os, called Gen. Charles de
Gaulle back to its leadership
as premier
this week. A
reluctant Par
1 i ament gave
the wart i m e
leader of Free
France nearly
d i c t a t o rial
power to rule
by decree for
six month s.
During that
Charles M.
McCann
time, with Parliament in re
cess, De Gaulle will try to
end the rebellion in Algeria,
strengthen the shaky govern-
LJL
Farley's Intentions
May Be Upsetting
To Top Democrats
By tYLE C. WILSON
UPI Correspondent
Washington (UPI) There
could be more than meets the
eye in James A. Farley's an-
n o u n cement
that he will
seek this
year's Demo
cratic nomina
tion to the
U.S. Senate
from New
York.
The New
York contest
between Re
Lyle C. Wilson
publican and Democratic nom
inees in November will be the
seat for which Sen. Irving M.
Ives, a Republican, will not
seek renomination.
Those New York Demo
cratic political, leaders who
commented on Farley's an
nouncement were friendly but
far from enthusiastic., - That
was the tone of what Demo
cratic National Committee
man Carmine G. De Sapio had
to say, and of the comment of
Michael H. Prendergast, Dem
ocratic state chairman.
Gov. Averill Harriman did
not hurry immediately into
print with any comment what
soever and, perhaps, his mo
ments of silence have a mean
ing all their ovn. Harriman is
the political freshman who
shell-shocked the Republican
party four years ago by win
ning the governorship from
Ives.
Must Win Big
Harriman won that one by
a slim 11,000-vote margin, but
to win at all was a great per
sonal triumph, and it would
have been so rated if his
bulge had been a mere few
hundreds of votes. The gov
ernor made a run for the
Holmes Denies
Hells Canyon Fund
. Salem (UPI) Gov. Rob
ert Holmes Thursday denied
that the state of Oregon had
contributed funds to an attor
new of the Hells Canyon As
sociation for Hells Canyon
hearings before the Federal
Power Commission.
The denial was issued in
connection with a state vouch
er on the executive depart
ment for $1,971.95 to Mrs.
Evelyn Cooper.
Gov. Holmes said the pay
ment to 'Mrs. Cooper was in
connection with a brief pre
pared for the Oregon Water
Resources Board seeking an
FPC delay in granting license
for two dams by the Pacific
Northwest Power Co. Mrs.
CooDer is an attorney for the
Hells Canyon Association.
She was retained by Ore
gon, Gov. Holmes explained,
"because her experience with
the Hells Canyon hearings
gave her great familiarity
with our problems, and be
cause she is familiar with the
workings of the Federal gov
ernment." TH? MAILMAN KNOWS
Chicago (UPI) A letter
bearing a Confederate flag
addressed to the "Hotel Dirty
Word," Chicago, has been de
livered to its intended receiv
er. Postmaster Carl Schroe
der said the letter, which
came ' from Cfclumbus, Ga.,
was delivered to the Sher
man hotel. ' p"
FORGET
Saturday
JL
mental financial situation and
restore France's prestige is
a world power.
Above all, he will draft and
submit to a national referen
dum a drastically revised con
stitution, to provide a etrong
er government and make it
impossible for aqua b b 1 i n g
politicians to upset cabinet
after cabinet as " they have
done for 12 years.
To the bitter chagrin of the
extremists, De Gaulle appoint
ed an all-star cabinet compris
ing left-wing, middle-of-the-road
and moderate right-wing
leaders.
De Gaulle then flew off to
Algeria where a revolt by pro
fessional army men and ex
tremists against any attempt
to end the nationalist rebel
lion by compromise led to a
threat of civil war and to
Democratic presidential nomi
nation thereafter under the
whip of former President
Truman.
It is reasonable almost
necessary to assume that
Harriman contemplates his
own pracfically assured re
election as governor this year
as a boost toward another
shot at the White House in
1960. There would be no boost
for Harriman, however, in a
narrow margin reelection.
The Governor is handicaped,
as is, by his age. He will be
69 years old in 190 which is
far, far along for a presidential
aspirant.
To overcome the handicap
of years and to impress north
ern and western Democrats
with his political sex appeal,
Harriman needs a lopsided re
election triumph this year. He
needs to win big, to lead the
ticket as the late Sen. Robert
F. Wagner used to do.
Widely Respected
Farley might hot be the
ideal running mate in New
York for a governor who not
only must win reelection, but
must 'lead the ticket. or
else. Farley is a popular man,
a skilled politician, a Demo
crat with sound foundations in
his own party and, yet, so
widely respected among Re
publicans that he .-would
likely to draw heavily from
the opposition.
Could be, therefore, that
Farley might, turn up leading
the Democratic ticket next
November if he succeeds now
in winning the Democratic
senatorial nomination. There
are lesser men and lesser
Democrats whom Harriman
might choose for ticket part
ners this year and, perhaps,
these things are running
through his mind. He and De
Sapio, of course, will have
much influence in selecting
the Democratic senatorial
nominee.
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De Gaulle's recall.
Already angry overo De
Gaulle's choice of a cabinet
of moderates, the extremists
ware shocked when he an
nounced that Algeria's nine
million Moslems would have
equal rights with the one mil
lion French colonists in future,
voting as part of France itself.
TJe Gaulle's situation at the
moment was that French
Communists may start trou
ble, that the right-wing ex
tremists and army men whose
revolt led to his call to office
are bitter over his modera
tion, that all Algerian rebels
still demand complete inde
pendence and that foreign
governments are anxiously
waiting for pronouncement on
his f (Beign policy.
The French crisis complete
ly overshadowed other for
eign news. But there were
two important developments
in the cold war.
First, Soviet Premier Ni
kita S. Khrushchev agfted to
President Eisenhower's pro
posal that experts represent
ing the Western allies and the
Soviet bloc of Communist
ruled countries start techni
cal talks on the possibility of
"fending nuclear weapons tests
through a control agreement
which would prevent cheat
ing. SecondlyQ Khrushchev in
another letter to Eisenhower
proposed an immense expan
sion of Russia-American trade
and asked for credits to fi
nance Russian purchases.
Khrushchev said that if the
United States desired, trade
between the two countries
could reach a volume of sev
eral billion dollars within a
few years.
The State Department an
nounced the indefinite post
ponement of the departure of
Dr. Milton Eisenhower, the
President's brother, on a fact
finding tour of six Central
American countries in his be
half. The State Department -said
the postponement .was due to
delay in arranging mutually
satisfactory dates for Dr. Eis
enhower's visit to the coun
tries concerned.
Actually, it appeared to be
the result of the anti-American
riots during Vice Presi
dent Richard M. Nixon's ret
cent "good will" tour of Latin
Ameryi. Dr. Eisenhower
probably will leave in July,
whenD students, who led the
riots against Nixon, 'will be
home on summer vacation.
PP&L Directors Inspect
Lewis River Project .
Cougar, Wash. (UPI)Di
rectors of Pacific Power &
Light company inspected the
$56 million Swift hydroelec
tric development on Lewis
river today prior to their
quarterly meeting.
Paul B.: McKee, president
of PP&L, said contractor pay
rolls on the project again
were over 1200 men and
would remain high through
the summer.
HEY KIDS
HERE'S
ADVENTURE
AT ITS
DEST!
The
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Y.M.C.A.
o
o